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Page 70 text:
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NCLH' l-leerts WCFZ young dDCl GGY!! School began with a whirl of gay parties. Early in the season we were persuaded to take our minds off being homesick and focus them on the problem of what the well-dressed student wears. The Fashion Show gave us all a glimpse of Do's and Don't's at Dana. After Mrs. Ripley's imitation of what not to do, we were never seen eating candy in the ville -well, hardly ever. On this evening also the Old Girls gave Fantasia again, with the same beauty that made it the prize winner of House Competitions last year. As for House Competitions this year, there was a variety of excellent entrees. 66 Senior Row and Cat Alley were serious and awe-inspiring in the prize winning A'Ave Maria. junior Row and Cemetery gave us something new and sensational with Dancing in the Dark, only the phosphorus on their costumes making an animated pattern in the blackness. Aloha brought the Stage Door Canteen right to the Dana Hall Gymnasium, and Warren took us back to the deep South with Shortnin' Bread. Later in the fall we were given a gay pre-war cruise by the Day Pupils. We re- veled in everything from the can-can of Paris to the hula-hula of Hawaii.
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Page 69 text:
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GZVWGD Preridezzf Ann Sickels .Sl6L'l'Efz1lf1 'lean Hurlbut The Dana Hall German Club reconvened this year. Miss Blatta ner, our adviser, was the source of a wealth of picture postcards, which, together with notes gath- ered by different members, ac- quainted us a little more with those German cities which we may never be able to see as they have been. Also, in our monthly meetings, we discussed prominent Germans and exercised our know- ledge of the language, while coffee was served in a fascinating collection of cups. The traditional Tand Partiew ended our year with a gay touch, and we leave the club with the wish for an equally bright coming year. 'tx World Affairs Club Prefideuf Phyllis Edmunds Vice-Pre.rZde11f ,Ioan Alford Serretufjr-Trerzmfer Phillis Ripley On Sunday afternoons, the members of the World Affairs Club frequently assembled at Greenlow for discussions of cur- rent world events and trends. The programs were varied, touch' ing on many aspects of world problems. Informal reviews ofthe news by the members kept us in- formed about important national and international questions. Often the World Affairs Club was given the opportunity to meet important speakers who came to the school and to ask them questions. One such personage was Dr. Howard Thurman, head of Howard Sem- inary in Washington.
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Page 71 text:
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